Now what? When the opponents jam the auction
#3
Posted 2005-February-02, 13:42
First of all, the double does not assure a bid from partner. With a squarish piece of cheese he may think it better to defend, thinking you more likely to be 4144. RHO surely holds a short suit for his preemptive jump and the diamond suit is most likely, reducing your defense considerably. In fact, if partner elects to pass the double a -790 number has just entered into the equation. Do you really want to play 4H doubled with this hand?
Second, even if he bids, what is there to keep him from correcting to 5S over 5D with xxx in spades and xx in diamonds?
Third is the fact that if I bid a direct 5D I may lose the sapde suit and a possible fit.
And fourth, is it even right to bid? The opponents don't have to be in a makeable contract and you do hold a 4-loser hand.
#4
Posted 2005-February-02, 14:08
#5
Posted 2005-February-02, 15:24
Choice 1=4S
Choice 2=5D
Most important I will try and be a Bulldog and go quickly to next hand when p comes down with 2 small spades.
#6
Posted 2005-February-02, 16:01
A correction to 5D over 5C shows imo typically 4 spades and 5+ diamonds. There is no reason for partner to correct with xxx in spades.
- hrothgar
#7
Posted 2005-February-02, 17:42
Hannie, on Feb 2 2005, 04:01 PM, said:
that's true, but on more than one occasion i've seen players bid 4S with 3, over a high level preempt such as this... if that happens here, do you pass? it seems you have to
#8
Posted 2005-February-02, 18:14
Pard rates to pass a double with his expected 4333 or so.
On the "one useful card" idea from pard, I'll try 5♦.
#9
Posted 2005-February-02, 18:17
#10
Posted 2005-February-02, 22:21
#11
Posted 2005-February-03, 03:07
The only other choice is 4♠ forcing them to bid 5♥, but I don't wanna defend 5♥.
#12
Posted 2005-February-03, 04:12
#13
Posted 2005-February-03, 06:29
If they play something like strong club, RHO can bid 4h with a lot of hands.
If they play natural system they must have an agreement if it shows strong hand or distributional hand.
What do you think about 4nt and correct 5c to 5d?
#15
Posted 2005-February-04, 07:05
Pass: -620
Double: -790
4S: too ugly to compute
5D: -200 if doubled.
I believe it was Larry Cohen who said that at these high levels it is better to bid your long suit as partner is more likely to leave in the double, playing you for a strong 4441 pattern with reasonable defense.
Caught up in the moment, and starry-eyed from the good spades, I doubled. We lost a bunch of imps on this hand and had to play a 6-board playoff. We lost.
WinstonM
#16
Posted 2005-February-04, 12:47
#17
Posted 2005-February-04, 14:00
Winstonm, on Feb 4 2005, 01:05 PM, said:
Larry might well have said this, but Edgar Kaplan is well known for suggesting that you "put your faith in your long suit" if in doubt.
I suspect most experts would double with the hand in question (especially professional players since they could then blame partner if he guessed wrong), but unless you have the agreement that such double strongly urge partner to bid (which would be an unusual agreement), I think 5D has a lot going for it.
Not sure what I would do - these problems are sometimes easier to solve if you are actually "at the table".
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
#18
Posted 2005-February-04, 18:09
W N E S
1H P 4H ?
Opponents are Crane Trophy winners and 4H is described as "Standard". What do you do now?